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The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): Categorical Eligibility

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The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): Categorical Eligibility

May 1June 22, 2018 (R42054)
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Contents

Appendixes

Summary

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) provides benefits to low-income, eligible households on an electronic benefit transfer (EBT) card; benefits can then be exchanged for foods at authorized retailers. SNAP reaches a large share of low-income households. In FY2017, a monthly average of 42.2 million persons in 20.9 million households participated in SNAP.

Federal SNAP law provides two basic pathways for financial eligibility to the program: (1) meeting program-specific federal eligibility requirements; or (2) being automatically or "categorically" eligible for SNAP based on being eligible for or receiving benefits from other specified low-income assistance programs. Categorical eligibility eliminated the requirement that households who already met financial eligibility rules in one specified low-income program go through another financial eligibility determination in SNAP.

In its traditional form, categorical eligibility conveys SNAP eligibility based on household receipt of cash assistance from Supplemental Security Income (SSI), the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant, or state-run General Assistance (GA) programs. However, since the 1996 welfare reform law, states have been able to expand categorical eligibility beyond its traditional bounds. That law created TANF to replace the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program, which was a traditional cash assistance program. TANF is a broad-purpose block grant that finances a wide range of social and human services. TANF gives states flexibility in meeting its goals, resulting in a wide variation of benefits and services offered among the states. SNAP allows states to convey categorical eligibility based on receipt of a TANF "benefit," not just TANF cash welfare. This provides states with the ability to convey categorical eligibility based on a wide range of benefits and services. TANF benefits other than cash assistance typically are available to a broader range of households and at higher levels of income than are TANF cash assistance benefits.

As of February 2018, 42 jurisdictions have implemented what the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has called "broad-based" categorical eligibility. These jurisdictions generally make all households with incomes below a state-determined income threshold eligible for SNAP. States do this by providing households with a low-cost TANF-funded benefit or service such as a brochure or referral to a telephone hotline. There are varying income eligibility thresholds within states that convey "broad-based" categorical eligibility, though no state has a gross income limit above 200% of the federal poverty guidelines. In all but five of these jurisdictions, there is no asset test required for SNAP eligibility. Categorically eligible families bypass the regular SNAP asset limits. However, their net incomes (income after deductions for expenses) must still be low enough to qualify for a SNAP benefit. That is, it is possible to be categorically eligible for SNAP but have net income too high to actually receive a benefit. The exception to this is one- or two-person households that would still receive the minimum benefit.

The Agriculture Act of 2014 (the "2014 Farm Bill," P.L. 113-79) made no changes to SNAP categorical eligibility rules. The House-passed version of the bill that became the 2014 Farm Bill would have eliminated broad-based categorical eligibility, but that change was not included in the conference agreement on the bill.

In the 115th Congress's work toward the next farm bill, the House-passed Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018 (H.R. 2), voted out of the House Committee on Agriculture, would make changes to limit but not eliminate broad-based categorical eligibility.


would make changes to limit but not eliminate broad-based categorical eligibility. The Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 (S. 3042), as reported by the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, would not make any changes to categorical eligibility.
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): Categorical Eligibility

Introduction

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) provided food assistance to a monthly average of 42.2 million persons in 20.9 million households in FY2017. Total benefit costs were $63.7 billion in FY2017.

SNAP participation and costs increased markedly from FY2007 to FY2013, mostly as a result of automatic and legislated responses to the recession.1 In FY2014, both participation and costs declined from peak FY2013 levels and have continued to decline. While much of the FY2007 to FY2013 increase in participation and costs was attributable to the poor economy, states during this period also increasingly adopted more expansive "categorical eligibility" rules—a set of policies that make a SNAP applicant eligible based on the applicant's involvement with other low-income assistance programs: benefits from the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), and state-financed General Assistance (GA) programs. This report discusses categorical eligibility and some of the issues raised by it. It first describes the three different types of categorical eligibility: traditional categorical eligibility conveyed through receipt of need-based cash assistance, and the newer "narrow" and "broad-based" categorical eligibilities conveyed via TANF "noncash" benefits. It also provides recent information on current state practices with regard to categorical eligibility.

The Agriculture Act of 2014 (the "2014 Farm Bill," P.L. 113-79) made no changes to SNAP categorical eligibility rules. The House-passed version of the bill that became the 2014 Farm Bill would have eliminated "narrow" and "broad-based categorical eligibility," retaining only "traditional" categorical eligibility for recipients of cash assistance. However, the House-passed provision was not included in the conference agreement on the bill.

InAs the 115th Congress's work works toward the next farm bill, the House Committee on Agriculture's-passed bill, the Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018 (H.R. 2), voted out of committee on April 18, 2018, would make changes to limit but not eliminate broad-basedwould make changes to limit but not eliminate broad-based categorical eligibility. Debate during the House Committee on Agriculture's April 18, 2018, markup was substantially focused on the bill's SNAP provisions, including the changes to categorical eligibility. On the other hand, the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, S. 3042, as reported by the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, would not make any changes to categorical eligibility. (Described further in "Consideration of Related Proposals for the Next Farm Bill.")

Regular and Categorical Eligibility for SNAP

Federal law provides the basic eligibility rules for SNAP. There are two basic pathways to gain financial eligibility for SNAP: (1) having income and resources below specified levels set out in federal SNAP law; and (2) being "categorically," or automatically, eligible based on receiving benefits from other specified low-income assistance programs.

Eligibility through Meeting Federal Income and Resource Tests

Under the regular federal rules, SNAP provides eligibility to households based on low income and limited assets. Households must have net income (income after specified deductions) below 100% of the federal poverty guidelines. In addition, federal rules provide that households without an elderly or disabled2 member must have gross income (income before deductions) below 130% of the federal poverty guidelines (see Table A-1).

Additionally, the regular eligibility rules provide that a household must have liquid assets below a specified level. Under federal rules in FY2018, a household's liquid assets must also be below $2,250, and below $3,500 in the case of households with an elderly or disabled member. The value of the home is excluded from this "assets test," as are certain other forms of assets (e.g., retirement and educational savings).

Further, a portion of the value of a household's vehicles is not counted toward the asset limit (up to $4,650 of the fair market value of a household's vehicles). However, federal law gives states the option to further exclude the value of vehicles from being counted toward the asset limit. States may elect to use the exclusion applicable for TANF assistance in their SNAP program. Under TANF, many states fully exclude the value of one vehicle. This option is distinct from categorical eligibility.

Categorical Eligibility

Federal law also makes households in which all members are either eligible for or receive benefits from TANF, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), or state-financed GA programs categorically, or automatically, eligible for SNAP.3 These households, who have already gone through eligibility determination for those programs, bypass the income and resource tests discussed above and are deemed financially eligible.4 They then have their SNAP benefits determined.

Categorically eligible households have their SNAP benefits determined under the same rules as other households. A household's SNAP benefit amount is based on the maximum benefit (which varies by household size) and its net countable income after deductions for certain expenses. While the household may be categorically eligible, its net income may be too high to actually receive a SNAP benefit. The exception is that all eligible households consisting of one or two persons are eligible for at least the minimum monthly benefit, set at $15 in the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia for FY2018.

Early History

Special rules providing for expedited eligibility of cash assistance recipients date back to amendments to the Food Stamp program enacted in 1971.5 These rules were eliminated in the rewrite of food stamp law enacted in 1977, but they were reinstated in phases during the early 1980s through 1990.6 Categorical eligibility was seen as advancing the goals of simplifying administration, easing entry to the program for eligible households, emphasizing coordination among low-income assistance programs, and reducing the potential for errors in establishing eligibility for benefits.7 The Food Security Act of 1985 conveyed categorical eligibility to all households receiving cash aid from Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), SSI, or state-run GA programs. These programs had their own income and resource tests (often more stringent than food stamp tests), so subjecting a household to a separate set of income and resource tests for food stamps could be seen as redundant and inefficient.

The 1996 Welfare Law and TANF

The current form of categorical eligibility resulted from the 1996 welfare reform law (the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, P.L. 104-193). That law ended AFDC, replacing it with TANF. AFDC was a traditional cash assistance program. Within some federal rules, states set AFDC eligibility and benefit amounts, but federal law established it as a cash welfare program. AFDC eligibility rules were generally more restrictive than those for food stamps, and most AFDC families also received a substantial food stamp benefit.

TANF, on the other hand, is a broad-purpose block grant that gives states broad flexibility to expend funds. The statutory purpose of TANF is to increase state flexibility to achieve four policy goals:8

  • 1. provide assistance to needy families so that children can be cared for in their own homes or in the homes of their relatives;
  • 2. end dependence by needy parents on government benefits through promoting work, job preparation, and marriage;
  • 3. reduce the incidence of out-of-wedlock pregnancies; and
  • 4. promote the formation and maintenance of two-parent families.

States may expend TANF funds and associated state funds (called Maintenance of Effort or MOE funds) in any manner "reasonably calculated"9 to achieve the TANF purpose, providing broad authority for the types of activities that may be funded. These activities include the traditional cash assistance programs—which convey traditional categorical eligibility.10 However, in FY2016 traditional cash welfare accounted for only 24% of all expenditures from the TANF block grant and MOE funds.

TANF funds a wide range of other benefits and services that seek to ameliorate the effects, or address the root causes, of child poverty. TANF benefits and services to achieve the first two goals of TANF (provide assistance, end dependence of needy parents on government benefits) must be for needy families with children. These benefits or services are need-tested, though states determine their own income thresholds. These benefits are often available to families at higher levels of income than is cash assistance, often a multiple of the federal poverty threshold, and without an asset test.

Moreover, TANF services directed at the third and fourth goals shown above can be for any person in a state; that is, TANF services to reduce out-of-wedlock pregnancies or promote two-parent families are not restricted to families with children. Federal rules also do not require that they be need-tested. Thus, these benefits and services are potentially available to a state's entire population.

What TANF Means for Categorical Eligibility

The 1996 welfare reform law did not substantively change SNAP law with respect to categorical eligibility. Rather, it simply replaced the reference to AFDC with one to TANF in the section of law that conveys categorical eligibility. As discussed above, TANF gives states much broader authority than they had under AFDC to offer different types of benefits and services. This expansion of authority under TANF had major implications for categorical eligibility, allowing states to convey categorical eligibility based on receipt of a wide range of human services rather than simply cash welfare.

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) regulations issued in 2000 provide rules for which noncash or in-kind TANF or MOE-funded benefits or services can be used to convey SNAP categorical eligibility.11 The regulations require that states make categorically eligible for SNAP

  • households in which all members receive or are authorized to receive12 cash assistance funded by TANF or MOE dollars; and
  • households in which all members receive or are authorized to receive noncash aid funded at least 50% by TANF or MOE dollars.

The regulations imposed one restriction on states in conveying categorical eligibility: if the TANF- or MOE-funded benefit or service was aimed at achieving TANF goals three (reducing out-of-wedlock pregnancies) or four (promoting two-parent families), the state would have to choose a program with an income limit of no more than 200% of the federal poverty guideline for conveying categorical eligibility.

Additionally, subject to the 200% of poverty restriction discussed above, the regulations give states the option of making categorically eligible for SNAP

  • households in which all members receive or are authorized to receive noncash assistance funded less than 50% by TANF or MOE dollars; and
  • households in which at least one member receives or is authorized to receive noncash aid funded at least partially by TANF or MOE dollars, but the state agency determines the whole household benefits from such noncash aid.

Traditional, Narrow, and Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility

As discussed, in instances of categorical eligibility, SNAP applicants can be found eligible for SNAP based on their receipt of benefits from other specified means-tested programs.13 At minimum, households that receive Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) cash assistance, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), or state-funded general assistance cash benefits must be found categorically eligible for SNAP. However, the 1996 welfare reform law's creation of TANF as a broad-based block grant has allowed for a state option to include a long list of benefits/services that can convey SNAP eligibility. This section discusses state choices in this area as of February 2018.

Scope and Reach of Categorical Eligibility

The current status of SNAP categorical eligibility is the product of state choices. At minimum, a state must implement "traditional" categorical eligibility, but some states allow additional programs and benefits to convey categorical eligibility. The USDA has developed a typology of state practices on categorical eligibility, categorizing states into three groups:

  • Traditional categorical eligibility only. In its traditional form, a household where all members receive need-tested cash aid from SSI, GA, or TANF is automatically made eligible for SNAP as well. These households have already met the income and (in general) resource test for cash aid. Note that states set income and asset eligibility rules for TANF and GA (see Table A-2 for maximum earnings possible for entry to TANF cash assistance in July 2016). SSI provides a federal income floor based on federal rules for the needy who are aged, blind, or disabled. However, states may supplement SSI with their own funds, leading to state variation in SSI eligibility as well. Based on the most current information available, only six states currently convey only traditional categorical eligibility.
  • "Narrow" categorical eligibility. These states have expanded categorical eligibility beyond just traditional categorical eligibility, but in a way to limit the number of households made eligible for SNAP. These states convey categorical eligibility through receipt of cash and certain TANF noncash benefits, such as child care and counseling. Based on the most current information available, only five states have "narrow" categorical eligibility policies.
  • "Broad-based" categorical eligibility. These states have expanded categorical eligibility in ways that make most, if not all, households with low incomes in a state categorically eligible for SNAP. States could make all low-income households in a state—including those without children—eligible for a TANF-funded service directed at either the reducing out-of-wedlock pregnancies or promoting two-parent families goals of TANF. If a state opted to do so, any low-income household (under 200% of poverty, per regulation) could either receive, or be authorized to receive, such a TANF-funded service. Based on the currently available information, 39 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and the Virgin Islands have broad-based categorical eligibility policies.

USDA currently does not have reliable information on the number of states that have opted to use "narrow" categorical eligibility. However, they do track both the number of states and rules used for states that have opted to use broad-based categorical eligibility. Figure 1 displays a map showing the states that use broad-based categorical eligibility (shaded in blue).

Figure 1. States Opting for SNAP Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility as of February 2018

(States opting for BBCE are shaded in blue)

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, as of February 2018.

Note: Some states implement "narrow" categorical eligibility. Without a reliable data source for "narrow," this map only reflects traditional and broad-based categorical eligibility.

"Broad-Based" Categorical Eligibility Practices

Broad-based categorical eligibility is a policy that makes most households with incomes below a certain threshold categorically eligible for SNAP. Typically, households are made categorically eligible through receiving or being authorized to receive a minimal TANF- or MOE-funded benefit or service, such as being given a brochure or being referred to a social services "800" telephone number (see Table 1). Recalling the USDA regulation, the brochure or telephone number must be funded with TANF or MOE dollars and thus must be directed at a TANF purpose.14 The Department of Agriculture reports that, as of February 2018, 42 jurisdictions operated broad-based categorical eligibility to make most or all households in their state with whom the state welfare office comes in contact SNAP eligible.

Table 1 shows the use of SNAP broad-based categorical eligibility by state as of February 2018. Of the 42 jurisdictions using broad-based categorical eligibility,

  • 40 make all family types eligible (New Hampshire and New York limit broad-based categorical eligibility to certain household types);
  • 37 currently have no asset test. Note, though, currently in 13 of these jurisdictions, households with an elderly and disabled member with incomes in excess of 200% of the federal poverty guidelines have to meet the regular SNAP asset tests of $3,500 for households of that type);
  • 5 states (Idaho, Maine, Michigan, Nebraska, and Texas) apply an asset test for all households); and
  • 31 have a gross income limit above 130% of the federal poverty guidelines.

According to USDA policy and guidance, there is a general way that a state would administer broad-based categorical eligibility for a SNAP applicant. The local SNAP office would collect basic income information on the applicant; if the applicant's income is below the limit specified, then the state office would administer, or determine whether a member of the household was authorized to receive, a relatively nominal TANF-funded benefit or service. Receipt of this TANF benefit or service then constitutes SNAP eligibility through broad-based categorical eligibility. (As discussed above, it is still possible to be categorically eligible but receive no benefit because net income is too high.)15

As an illustration, in the case of the District of Columbia, as shown in the table, if the applicant's gross income is below 200% of poverty, the applicant would then receive a particular brochure for a program that is TANF-funded and would then be eligible for SNAP through the broad-based categorical eligibility pathway.

Table 1. SNAP Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility by State

Information as of February 2018, excludes states without broad-based categorical eligibility

State

Households Eligible

Type of TANF Benefit or Servicea

Asset Rules

Gross Income Limit for Households Without an Elderly or Disabled Member (% of federal poverty guidelines)b

Alabama

All

Brochure

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

130%

Arizona

All

Referral on application

No limit

185%

California

All

Pamphlet

No limit

200%

Colorado

All

Notice on application

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

130%

Connecticut

All

"Help for People in Need" brochure

No limit

185%

Delaware

All

Application refers to a pregnancy prevention hotline

No limit

200%

District of Columbia

All

Brochure

No limit

200%

Florida

All

Notice

No limit

200%

Georgia

All

TANF Community Outreach Services brochure

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

130%

Hawaii

All

Brochure

No limit

200%

Idaho

All

Flyer about referral service

$5,000

130%

Illinois

All

Guide to services

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

165%

Iowa

All

Notice of eligibility

No limit

160%

Kentucky

All

Resource guide

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

130%

Maine

All

Resource guide

$5,000

185%

Maryland

All

Referral to services on application

No limit

200%

Massachusetts

All

Brochure

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

200%

Michigan

All

Notice on application

$5,000. First vehicle is excluded; other vehicles with fair market value over $15,000 are counted.

200%

Minnesota

All

Domestic violence brochure

No limit

165%

Mississippi

All

Language on notice

No limit

130%

Montana

All

Brochure

No limit

200%

Nebraska

All

Pamphlet

$25,000 for liquid assets

130%

Nevada

All

Pregnancy prevention information on application

No limit

200%

New Hampshire

Households with at least one dependent child

Brochure

No limit

185%

New Jersey

All

Brochure

No limit

185%

New Mexico

All

Brochure

No limit

165%

New York

Households with dependent care expenses; or

Households with earned income

Brochure mailed yearly

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

200% (for households with dependent care expenses)

150% (for households with earned income and no dependent care expenses)

North Carolina

All

Not specified

No limit

200%

North Dakota

All

Statement on application/recertification forms and pamphlet

No limit

200%

Ohio

All

Ohio Benefit Bank information on approval notice

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

130%

Oklahoma

All

Certification notice has 2-1-1 number for information and referral to community services

No limit

130%

Oregon

All

Pamphlet

No limit

185%

Pennsylvania

All

Pamphlet

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

160%

Rhode Island

All

Publication

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

185%

South Carolina

All

Pamphlet

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

130%

Texas

All

Information about various services provided on the application

$5,000 (excludes one vehicle up to $15,000, includes excess vehicle value).

165%

Vermont

All

Bookmark with telephone number and website for services

No limit

185%

Washington

All

Information and referral services provided on approval letter.

No limit

200%

West Virginia

All

Information and referral services program brochure

No limit

130%

Wisconsin

All

Job Net services language on approval and change notices

No limit

200%

Guam

All

Brochure

No limit

165%

Virgin Islands

All

Brochure

No limit. Households with an elderly or disabled member with incomes over 200% of poverty face a $3,500 asset limit.

175%

Source: Prepared by the Congressional Research Service based on data from U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service (FNS).

a. Type of TANF benefit or service is information collected by the USDA, and this column utilizes USDA's terms. References to a notice or notice on application generally refers to an agency communication that an applicant may be eligible for TANF or related benefit.

b. Households with an elderly or disabled member do not have a gross income limit in SNAP.

Incomes and Assets of SNAP Households

Income

Because broad-based categorical eligibility conveys SNAP to households with gross incomes as high as 200% of poverty, there is concern that it could be unduly expanding the program. However, broad-based categorical eligibility has not resulted in large numbers of households receiving SNAP who have gross incomes, as measured using SNAP income counting rules, exceeding 130% of poverty.16 Table 2 shows that in FY2016, a monthly average of 4.2% of all households without an elderly or disabled member had incomes above 130% of poverty. (As mentioned above, households with an elderly or disabled member are not subject to the 130% of poverty gross income limit under regular federal eligibility rules.)

Table 2. Gross Incomes of SNAP Households Compared with Poverty: FY2016

By Household Typehousehold type

 

Households Without an Elderly or Disabled Member

Households With an Elderly or Disabled Member

All SNAP Households

Below Poverty

85.3%

76.9%

81.8%

100% to 130% of poverty

10.5

15.4

12.6

131% of poverty and higher

4.2

7.7

5.7

Totals

100.0

100.0

100.0

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY2016 SNAP Quality Control Data File.

Notes: Detail may not add to totals because of rounding. The information on the Quality Control Data File sometimes fails to categorize a household with a disabled member. Therefore, some households classified in this table as "without an elderly or disabled member" may in fact contain a disabled person.

Table 3 shows both the number and percentage of households without an elderly or disabled member that have incomes above 130% of poverty by state.17 Note that tabulations in Table 2 and Table 3 reflect states' SNAP households under states' broad-based categorical eligibility practices in place during FY2016. Some states' current practices are different from their practices in FY2016, so tabulations here do not necessarily reflect current state practices.

Table 3. Estimates of SNAP Households without an Elderly or Disabled Member with Gross Incomes Over 130% of Poverty by State, FY2016

State

Number of SNAP Households Without an Elderly or Disabled Member and Gross Income of 131% of Poverty or Higher

Percentage of All SNAP Households Without an Elderly or Disabled Member and with Gross Income of 131% of Poverty or Higher

Alabama

2,013

0.9%

Alaska

0

0.0

Arizona

15,883

5.4

Arkansas

155

0.1

California

66,759

3.8

Colorado

530

0.4

Connecticut

10,981

8.9

Delaware

3,526

8.6

District of Columbia

2,390

5.6

Florida

64,689

6.4

Georgia

10,375

2.1

Hawaii

2,606

5.5

Idaho

71

0.2

Illinois

6,143

1.0

Indiana

0

0.0

Iowa

8,586

8.0

Kansas

0

0.0

Kentucky

278

0.2

Louisiana

0

0.0

Maine

3,409

9.1

Maryland

22,023

9.6

Massachusetts

23,481

13.4

Michigan

29,750

7.0

Minnesota

10,963

8.8

Mississippi

239

0.2

Missouri

1,251

0.6

Montana

2,091

6.9

Nebraska

213

0.5

Nevada

11,318

7.8

New Hampshire

2,090

10.7

New Jersey

12,076

5.3

New Mexico

4,531

3.4

New York

21,833

3.3

North Carolina

27,907

5.9

North Dakota

1,009

7.6

Ohio

2,399

0.6

Oklahoma

0

0.0

Oregon

19,710

8.6

Pennsylvania

33,931

7.5

Rhode Island

4,492

9.7

South Carolina

725

0.4

South Dakota

179

0.7

Tennessee

0

0.0

Texas

41,121

4.2

Utah

99

0.2

Vermont

2,649

15.2

Virginia

0

0.0

Washington

25,846

8.4

West Virginia

1,755

1.9

Wisconsin

25,824

12.3

Wyoming

0

0.0

Guam

1,171

9.8

Virgin Islands

852

9.0

Totals

529,921

4.2

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulation of the FY2015 SNAP Quality Control data file.

Notes: Some states that have gross income limits of 130% of poverty report a small number of households without an elderly or disabled member as having incomes above 130% of poverty. This is likely because of limitation on the Quality ControlControl Data File in identifying disabled individuals. The information on the Quality Control Data File sometimes fails to categorize a household with a disabled member. Therefore, some households classified in this table as "without an elderly or disabled member" may in fact contain a disabled person.

Assets

As discussed above, broad-based categorical eligibility also eliminates the SNAP asset test in many states. Since states that do not administer an asset test generally do not collect data on the assets of SNAP households, it is not possible to determine the extent to which broad-based categorical eligibility has resulted in households with assets above the usual SNAP limit receiving benefits.

Consideration of Related Proposals for the Next Farm Bill

The enacted 2014 Farm Bill did not change categorical eligibility, although the House-passed version would have eliminated broad-based categorical eligibility.

As the 115th Congress begins workworks toward the next farm bill, the bill voted out of committee by the House Agriculture CommitteeHouse-passed bill, the Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018 (H.R. 2), would make changes to limit but not eliminate broad-based categorical eligibility. Debate during the committeeHouse Committee on Agriculture's April 18, 2018, markup was substantially focused on the bill's SNAP provisions, including the changes to categorical eligibility. None of the committee's Democrats voted for the billWhereas, the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 (S. 3042), as reported by the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, would not make any changes to categorical eligibility.

Section 4006 of H.R. 2, as ordered to be reported, would change broad-based categorical eligibility in a few ways. In states with broad-based options in place, some but not all households would be affected by this change. Under the proposal:

  • To be categorically eligible, households would have to receive SSI, state general assistance, or "cash assistance or ongoing and substantial services" through a state program funded by TANF. While these terms would be subject to implementation, it is expected that a brochure may not meet this more specific TANF-funded benefit.
  • There would be two gross income limits for broad-based categorical eligibility:
  • 1. Households with an elderly or disabled member must be at or below 200% of the federal poverty line.
  • 2. Households without an elderly or disabled member must be at or below 130% of the federal poverty line.

  • Households meeting respective gross income limits and receiving a TANF-funded benefit or other benefit that conveys categorical eligibility would not have to meet the law's asset tests.
  • The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the amendments to categorical eligibility, in the House Committee's reported bill, would reduce SNAP spending by $5.035 billion dollars over 10 years (FY2019-FY2028).18

    CBO also estimates that in an average year, about 400,000 households would lose SNAP eligibility. As SNAP recipients are also eligible for free school meals, CBO estimated that in an average year, 265,000 children would lose access to free meals.19 On the House floor, Section 4006 of the reported-bill was amended by H.Amdt. 606 to include a later implementation date, October 1, 2020, so the House-passed bill's cost and participation estimates could be different than those of the reported bill.
    Appendix.

    Table A-1. Counted (Net) and Basic (Gross) Monthly Income Eligibility Limits for SNAP, FY2018

    Eligibility Limits in Effect October 1, 2017, to September 30, 2018

    Household Size

    48 States, DC, and the Territories

    Alaska

    Hawaii

    Counted (net) monthly income eligibility limits (100% of poverty):

    1 person

    $1,005

    $1,255

    $1,155

    2 persons

    1,354

    1,691

    1,556

    3 persons

    1,702

    2,127

    1,957

    4 persons

    2,050

    2,563

    2,358

    5 persons

    2,399

    2,999

    2,759

    6 persons

    2,747

    3,435

    3,160

    7 persons

    3,095

    3,870

    3,560

    8 persons

    3,444

    4,306

    3,961

    Each additional person

    349

    436

    401

    Basic (gross) monthly income eligibility limits (130% of poverty):

    1 person

    $1,307

    $1,632

    $1,502

    2 persons

    1,760

    2,199

    2,023

    3 persons

    2,213

    2,765

    2,544

    4 persons

    2,665

    3,332

    3,065

    5 persons

    3,118

    3,898

    3,586

    6 persons

    3,571

    4,465

    4,107

    7 persons

    4,024

    5,031

    4,628

    8 persons

    4,477

    5,598

    5,150

    Each additional person

    453

    567

    522

    Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service.

    Table A-2. Maximum Monthly Earnings a Family of Three May Have and Still Meet Initial Eligibility for TANF Cash Assistance: July 2016

    Family Composed of One Parent and Two Children

    State

    Maximum Monthly Earnings

    Maximum Monthly Earnings as a Percentage of the 2016 Federal Poverty Guidelines

    Alabama

    $269

    16.0%

    Alaska

    1,679

    80.0

    Arizona

    585

    34.8

    Arkansas

    279

    16.6

    California

    1,381

    82.2

    Colorado

    511

    30.4

    Connecticut

    908

    54.0

    Delaware

    428

    25.5

    DC

    601

    35.8

    Florida

    393

    23.4

    Georgia

    514

    30.6

    Hawaii

    1,740

    90.0

    Idaho

    972

    57.9

    Illinois

    840

    50.0

    Indiana

    378

    22.5

    Iowa

    1,061

    63.2

    Kansas

    519

    30.9

    Kentucky

    908

    54.0

    Louisiana

    360

    21.4

    Maine

    1,023

    60.9

    Maryland

    795

    47.3

    Massachusetts

    1,143

    68.0

    Michigan

    815

    48.5

    Minnesota

    1,327

    79.0

    Mississippi

    457

    27.2

    Missouri

    557

    33.2

    Montana

    817

    48.6

    Nebraska

    991

    59.0

    Nevada

    1,575

    93.8

    New Hampshire

    844

    50.2

    New Jersey

    636

    37.9

    New Mexico

    941

    56.0

    New York

    879

    52.3

    North Carolina

    681

    40.5

    North Dakota

    1,331

    79.2

    Ohio

    840

    50.0

    Oklahoma

    824

    49.0

    Oregon

    616

    36.7

    Pennsylvania

    677

    40.3

    Rhode Island

    1,277

    76.0

    South Carolina

    1,548

    92.1

    South Dakota

    857

    51.0

    Tennessee

    1,315

    78.3

    Texas

    402

    23.9

    Utah

    668

    39.8

    Vermont

    1,103

    65.7

    Virginia

    665

    39.6

    Washington

    1,040

    61.9

    West Virginia

    565

    33.6

    Wisconsin

    1,932

    115.0

    Wyoming

    1,256

    74.8

    Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on data from the Urban Institute's Welfare Rules Database.

    Author Contact Information

    [author name scrubbed], Specialist in SocialNutrition Assistance Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
    [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Nutrition AssistanceSocial Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

    Area of Expertise by Author

    Area of Expertise

    Name

    Phone

    E-mail

    TANF

    [author name scrubbed]

    [phone number scrubbed]

    [email address scrubbed]

    SNAP

    [author name scrubbed]

    [phone number scrubbed]

    [email address scrubbed]

    Footnotes

    Ibid., pp. 13-14 of this policy.

    1.

    See Congressional Budget Office, The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, April 2012, http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/04-19-SNAP.pdf.

    2.

    "Elderly or disabled" is defined in Section 3(j) of the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008.

    3.

    Section 5(a) of the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008.

    4.

    Additionally, federal law also provides a separate rule for households where some, but not all, members receive benefits from TANF or SSI. In such households, recipients of TANF or SSI benefits are deemed to have passed the SNAP resource test. That is, the assets of household members who receive TANF, SSI, or GA are disregarded from the household's total resources when determining whether the household passes the asset test (Section 5(j) of the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008).

    5.

    Section 6 of P.L. 91-671.

    6.

    The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1982 (P.L. 97-253) provided that a household in which all members received Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) cash assistance bypass the Food Stamp asset test (but not the income eligibility test). The Food Security Act of 1985 (P.L. 99-198) provided that households in which all members received AFDC or SSI would be automatically eligible for Food Stamps, bypassing both the income and asset tests. P.L. 99-198 made this a temporary provision that would sunset at the end of FY1998. P.L. 100-435 eliminated the sunset, making categorical eligibility a permanent feature of Food Stamp law. Categorical eligibility was extended to recipients of state-run GA programs in 1990, enacted as part of P.L. 101-624.

    7.

    U.S. Congress, House Committee on Agriculture, report to accompany H.R. 2100, 99th Cong., 1st sess., September 13, 1985, H.Rept. 99-271, Part 1 (Washington: GPO, 1985), p. 142.

    8.

    Section 401(a) of the Social Security Act.

    9.

    Section 404(a)(1) of the Social Security Act.

    10.

    In regulations promulgated after the 1996 welfare law, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) divided TANF- and MOE-funded activities into two categories: (1) assistance, and (2) everything else. The regulations defined assistance generally as representing the traditional cash assistance programs ("basic assistance") and transportation or child care aid for nonworking persons.

    11.

    The regulations are at 7 C.F.R. 273.2(j). See discussion of the final rule at U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, "Food Stamp Program: Noncitizen Eligibility, and Certification Provisions of P.L. 104-193, as Amended by Public Laws 104-208, 105-33, and 105-185," 65 Federal Register 70159-70161, November 21, 2000.

    12.

    The regulations also provide that a family is categorically eligible if they either receive a TANF- or MOE-funded benefit or if they are "authorized" to receive such a benefit. "Authorized" to receive a benefit means that they have been determined eligible and have been informed as such; they do not need to actually be receiving benefits.

    13.

    See 7 U.S.C. 2014(a).

    14.

    For a discussion of state practices regarding "broad-based" categorical eligibility, see U.S. Government Accountability Office, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program: Improved Oversight of State Eligibility Expansions Needed, GAO-12-670, July 2012.

    15.

    Additionally, some states impose a net income test for at least some categories of applicants and recipients under their broad-based categorical eligibility policies. See Elizabeth Laird and Carole Trippe, Programs Conferring Categorical Eligibility for SNAP: State Policies and the Number and Characteristics of Households Affected, Mathematica Policy Research, February 2014, p. 14.

    16.

    This is based on data from the SNAP Quality Control Data files. These are administrative data, and the files include monthly income data collected in determining SNAP eligibility and benefits. The data and the resulting analysis differ in a number of ways from that of Census Bureau household survey income data of SNAP households. SNAP monthly income data represents gross income as defined in SNAP law; this might exclude some income reported by households in the Census survey. Moreover, SNAP eligibility and benefits are based on monthly income. The most widely reported income data from Census household surveys examines annual income. Households may use the SNAP program in particular months of economic need, which annual income data would not capture. There are also differences between the SNAP and Census Bureau concepts of household and poverty thresholds.

    17.

    Some states that have gross income limits of 130% of poverty report a small number of households without an elderly or disabled member as having incomes above 130% of poverty. This is likely because of limitation on the Quality Control Data File in identifying disabled individuals. The information on the Quality Control Data File sometimes fails to categorize a household with a disabled member. Therefore, some households classified in this table as "without an elderly or disabled member" may in fact contain a disabled person.

    18.

    CBO, Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018, H.R. 2, April 13, May 2, 2018, p. 47, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/53760. 53819. Note that interactions with other policies in H.R. 2, as ordered to be reported, may reduce the impacteffect of this policy.

    19.